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Starting out, of course, I have to reiterate my opinion that we'd be best off dropping the idea of amateurism for scholarship athletes. That said, if you aren't going to do that, then the NCAA's position isn't that unreasonable. First off, it isn't a First Amendment issue. The NCAA isn't telling the athlete that he can't say or write anything, only that he can't publish in a commercial publication. Lots of people work under similar stipulations at their jobs. Generally, the restrictions aren't this broad, but I would assume that it falls under the same category. As is often the case, when you sign a contract (or whatever the correct terminology is for a scholarship), you waive the ability to do certain things you were allowed to do before. As to the merits, this is once again a case where the rule in most of its applications is a good idea. If you're going to have amateurism, you don't want the athletes endorsing commercial products. Writing for SI is doing just that. In this particular case, it would seem to be reasonable to allow the article to go ahead. Unfortunately, the rules have to cover general conditions and can't be tailored to everyone's individual situations. J. Michael Jackson HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.